Dr. Rebecca L. Spang Office Hours: Thurs. 12:30 2:00 Associate Professor, Department of History (or by appointment) Ballantine 711 Indiana University, Bloomington e-mail: rlspang@indiana.edu History W 300 (32798) The History of Money http://www.indiana.edu/~moneyhis/ What is money? What does it mean and why do we value it? Can societies exist without money? Is all money the same? In this course, we will ask these and related questions as we use money to investigate a wide range of themes in social, cultural, and political history. While we will read excerpts from some famous economists, this is a course neither in economic history nor in finance nor in economics. It is, rather, a history course focused on the role of money in politics, society, culture, art, and religion. No previous study of economics or history is required but students should be prepared to work hard and think creatively. If you do not want to have your assumptions about money challenged, you should not take this course. The focus of the course will be on Europe, North America, and related empires over the past five hundred years but some attention will also be paid to ancient-medieval Europe and the non-western world. We will read and look at: theories of money; key studies of economic anthropology; and a variety of what historians call primary sources (that is, original historical documents; in this case, that means coins and paintings as well political, philosophical, and fictional writings). Readings will average 50 pages per week; all readings are available via the course website. You are not required to buy any books for this course, but you will probably want to print many of the readings. Grades will be calculated on the basis of: three short assignments (5% each); class attendance and participation (15%); two take-home midterms (20% each); and a final exam (30%). Policy on Attendance and Participation: You are expected to attend all course meetings (lecture and discussion). If you miss more than three sessions, for whatever reason, I have the right to give you a failing grade for the course (regardless of your grades on written work). 15% of each student s final grade will be determined by his/her attendance and participation. Remember that being present even being present and talking is not necessarily the same as constructive participation! Please feel free to ask questions in lecture. I will often ask you questions in lecture these questions are not tests of your knowledge and you should not be shy about responding to them. Readings: All required readings are available via the website: www.indiana.edu/~moneyhis. You should at least skim the readings before lecture and read them carefully before your discussion class. This second time, you should read actively: this means with a pencil in your hand, so that you can mark important/confusing
passages and make comments in the margins. (Of course, it goes without saying that you must not write in library books!) If you are reading from a screen, I recommend that you take notes by hand or otherwise actively engage with the text. The midterms and final exam for this course will draw heavily on the readings and you will need to know them well. If you have difficulty accessing or understanding the readings please let me know; I will be happy to talk with you after class, in office hours, or by e-mail (rlspang@indiana.edu) Please note that some of the readings are under copyright; you will need to use your Indiana University CAS (Central Authentication Service) username and password in order to access them. A note on further reading: You will notice that the website lists further reading for each week. It is my expectation that several times in the semester, you will be sufficiently intrigued and inspired to click through some websites, download an article, or even go to the Wells Library and borrow a book. You will find the recommendations for further reading especially helpful when you are writing the take-home midterm. Please note: in keeping with conventional practice, the further readings are listed in alphabetical order by the author s surname. You need to read through the list to identify works that may be of interest to you. Remember that Amazon.com and books.google.com allow you to view selected pages of many recently published books. Plagiarism and cheating: Plagiarism and misuse of sources constitute intellectual theft and will not be tolerated under any circumstances. Students caught plagiarizing material in their written work or cheating in any other fashion, including collaborating on assignments or exams, will automatically fail the course. They will also be reported to the Dean of Students (as university regulations require) and may therefore face further penalties. Please see the course website for assistance with proper citation format and for links to college guidelines on academic honesty. All written work must be submitted promptly. Extensions will be granted only in the case of serious, documented illness and/or grave personal tragedy. Late work will be penalized 1/3 grade per day. Students with disabilities or others needing accommodation should speak with the instructor during the first two weeks of class. I will do whatever I can, but please note that in order to be eligible for many kinds of support, you need first to have been in contact with the Office of Disability Services for Students. If you think you may require that Office s support, please see their website: http://studentaffairs.iub.edu/dss/ This syllabus is accurate at the time of writing but may be changed in the course of the semester. Please check the course website regularly; if the two differ, information provided on the website supersedes that presented here.
Schedule of Lectures and Readings http://www.indiana.edu/~moneyhis/ Introductions and Key Concepts Jan. 13 Jan. 15 What is money? What is the history of money? Benjamin Franklin, The Way to Wealth (1758). P.T. Barnum, The Art of Money Getting (1880), at least the first section. Muriel Stanek, How People Earn and Use Money (1968). Jan. 20 Jan. 22 Martin Luther King Day, no class Primitive money and general equivalents William Stanley Jevons, Money and the Mechanism of Exchange (1875), chapter one ( Barter ). Paul Bohannan, The Impact of Money on an African Subsistence Economy, Journal of Economic History 19 (1959), 491-503. Jan. 27 Money and value Karl Marx, Capital, volume one (1867), selections on the website. Georg Simmel, On the Psychology of Money, (1889). Money in Pre Modern Europe Jan. 29 The ancient economy debate Moses Finley, The Ancient Economy (1973), chapter one. Aristotle, Politics (approximately 330 BCE), Book One, section nine. Plutarch, Life of Lycurgus (written in 75 CE about a Spartan king from the ninth century BCE). First short assignment (see website) due in discussion class on Thursday, January 30 th. Feb. 3 Feb. 5 Money and the ancient state Money and the fall of Rome Lawrence Reed, The Fall of Rome and Modern Parallels (1979). Peter Brown, Through the Eye of a Needle: Wealth, the Fall of Rome, and the Making of Christianity in the West (2012), selection.
Feb. 10 Feb. 12 A monetary dark age? Cities, coinage, and the Commercial Revolution Philip Grierson, The Origins of Money (1977), pp. 19-29. Salic/Salian Law, selections on website (c.500-800). Roberto S. Lopez, The Commercial Revolution of the Middle Ages, pp. 56-79. First take-home midterm will be posted on the course website after discussion classes on Thursday. Your exam is due in class on Monday, February 17 th. Feb. 17 Feb. 19 Religion, culture, and commerce in the high Middle Ages Did capitalism have a spirit? Abbott Suger of Saint Denis, On what was done during his administration (1144-1148). Solet Annuere confirming the Rule of St. Francis (1223). Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism (1905), final chapter. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion (1536), book 3, chap. 21. Feb. 24 Feb. 26 International trade and the price revolution The many moneys of the slave trade Walter Johnson, Soul by Soul: Life Inside the Antebellum Slave Market (2000), 19-30. Patrick Manning, Slavery and African Life (1990), 88-102. Money and Modern Political Thought, c.1700 present March 3 March 5 Culture, circulation, and credit in early-modern societies Money, property, and political thought John Locke, The Second Treatise of Government (1689), chapter five. [see website for further readings]
March 10 March 12 Bubbles, banks, and schemes Modern wealth and ancient republics John Kenneth Galbraith, The Affluent Society (1958), chapter three. Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations (1776), selections. Jean-Jacques Rousseau, On the Government of Poland (1773), selection. Second short assignment (see website) due in discussion class on Thursday, March 13 th. Spring Break March 24 March 26 Money and banks in revolutionary North America Money, banks, and Americans John Kenneth Galbraith, Money: Whence it Came, Where it Went (1975), 45-62. Alexander Hamilton, Notes on the Advantages of a National Bank (1791). Thomas Jefferson, Opinion on the Constitutionality of a National Bank. Stephen Mihm, A Nation of Counterfeiters (2007), 1-19. Second take-home midterm will be posted on the course website after discussion classes on Thursday. Your exam is due in class on Monday, March 31 st. March 31 April 2 Revolution, reaction, and the politics of poverty Money s critics: conservatives and socialists Gareth Stedman Jones, An End to Poverty? pp. 64-79. Thomas Malthus, Essay on Population (1798), preface and chaps. 4-5. Thomas Carlyle, Signs of the Times (1829). April 7 April 9 National money and civil war Populists and greenbacks (and silver shoes on a yellow brick road) Michael O Malley, Free Silver and the Constitution of Man, Common-place 6:3 (April 2006). William Jennings Bryan, Cross of Gold speech (1896). L. Frank Baum, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900). Third short assignment (see website) due in discussion class on Thursday, April 10 th.
April 14 April 16 The great war and the great inflation And the great depression John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919), selections. Three short texts about inflation in Weimar Germany: Friedrich Kroner, Overwrought Nerves, from the Illustrated Berlin News (August 26, 1923); Betty Scholem (a German-Jewish woman in Berlin), letter to her son in Palestine (October 1923); short selection from Hans Ostwald, A Moral History of the Inflation (1931). April 21 Responses to depression, 1930-1945 April 23 Post-war history, memory, and political economy Franklin D. Roosevelt, "On the Banking Crisis" (First Fireside Chat, March 1933). Friedrich Hayek, The Road to Serfdom (1944), chapter 7. April 28 April 30 Bitcoin and debt ceilings: money today in historical perspective Review May 9 FINAL EXAM (Friday of Exams Week) 10:15-12:15 Remember: This syllabus is accurate at the time of writing but may be changed in the course of the semester. Check the website www.indiana.edu/~moneyhis regularly; if the two differ, the information provided on the website supersedes that presented here.